Learning from the Architecture Studio: Implications for Project-Based Pedagogy

Sarah Kuhn
Department of Regional Economic and Social Development
University of Massachusetts, MA 01854 Lowell, USA
E-mail: sarah_kuhn@uml.edu

Abstract:
Architects are educated through a process that revolves around the `studio course’, and an attempt to apply the studio method of teaching to the education of software designers reveals much about education and practice in both professions. Characteristics of the architecture studio include: project-based work on complex and open-ended problems, very rapid iteration of design solutions, frequent formal and informal critique, consideration of a heterogeneous range of issues, the use of precedent and thinking about the whole, the creative use of constraints, and the central importance of design media. Experience from a studio course in software design provokes creative reflection on engineering design education, and on how it might be improved.

Follow Blog via Email

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 71 other followers

Acknowledgements

This web site is hosted by Harvey Mudd College's Center for Design Education; its development was supported by the National Science Foundation under grant EEC-1102663, which also supported Mudd Design Workshop VIII.